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Risk factors, outcomes, and epidemiological and etiological study of hospitalized COVID-19 patients with bacterial co-infection and secondary infections.


ABSTRACT:

Background

As a common complication of viral respiratory tract infection, bacterial infection was associated with higher mortality and morbidity. Determining the prevalence, culprit pathogens, outcomes, and risk factors of co-infection and secondary infection occurring in hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) will be beneficial for better antibiotic management.

Methods

In this retrospective cohort research, we assessed clinical characteristics, laboratory parameters, microbiologic results, and outcomes of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 patients with bacterial co-infection and secondary infection in West China Hospital from 2022 December 2nd to 2023 March 15th.

Results

The incidence of bacterial co-infection and secondary infection, as defined by positive culture results of clinical specimens, was 16.3% (178/1091) and 10.1% (110/1091) respectively among 1091 patients. Acinetobacter, Klebsiella, and Pseudomonas were the most commonly identified bacteria in respiratory tract samples of COVID-19 patients. In-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients with co-infection (17.4% vs 9.5%, p = 0.003) and secondary infection (28.2% vs 9.5%, p < 0.001) greatly exceeded that of COVID-19 patients without bacterial infection. Cardiovascular disease (1.847 (1.202-2.837), p = 0.005), severe COVID-19 (1.694 (1.033-2.778), p = 0.037), and critical COVID-19 (2.220 (1.196-4.121), p = 0.012) were proved to be risk factors for bacterial co-infection, while only critical COVID-19 (1.847 (1.202-2.837), p = 0.005) was closely related to secondary infection.

Conclusions

Bacterial co-infection and secondary infection could aggravate the disease severity and worsen clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients. Notably, only critical COVID-19 subtype was proved to be an independent risk factor for both co-infection and secondary infection. Therefore, standard empirical antibiotics was recommended for critically ill COVID-19 rather than all the inpatients according to our research.

SUBMITTER: Duan Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10917871 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Risk factors, outcomes, and epidemiological and etiological study of hospitalized COVID-19 patients with bacterial co-infection and secondary infections.

Duan Yishan Y   Wang Jing J   Wang Suyan S   Zhang Rui R   Hu Jinrui J   Li Weimin W   Chen Bojiang B  

European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases : official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology 20240122 3


<h4>Background</h4>As a common complication of viral respiratory tract infection, bacterial infection was associated with higher mortality and morbidity. Determining the prevalence, culprit pathogens, outcomes, and risk factors of co-infection and secondary infection occurring in hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) will be beneficial for better antibiotic management.<h4>Methods</h4>In this retrospective cohort research, we assessed clinical characteristics, laboratory  ...[more]

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